Friday, February 8, 2019
A Modern Grendel :: Literature, Beowulf
In the large poem Beowulf, the monster Grendel is depicted as a villainous brute with an unquenchable thirst for human flesh and blood. Grendel, written by prat Gardner, though, offers a more nuanced depiction of the beast by describing the events in Beowulf through with(predicate) Grendels narration. Throughout the story, Grendel adopts various romantic characteristics and beliefs including isolation, individualism, and mysticism. These romantic characteristics, though, foster Grendels murderous intentions and in turn gives him an anti-hero persona. Nearing the end of the novel, his romantic antihero trends transforms his life into a never conclusion limbo. His only salvation comes in the form of death. Grendels inevitable demise represents unavoidable fate.Romanticism places a heavy focus on separation from society. In Gardners novel, this romantic theme of isolation is echoed when Hrothgars community rejects Grendel. Grendel, even before he discovers the humans, has always been in a sense alone. His mother is as well as silent to be considered a truly fulfilling companion and the animals around him are too primitive to even communicate. The only creature that Grendel could ever truly beat with was the human race for they both shared the same language, and intellect. The humans, though, never fondle Grendel. The very first time Grendel attempts communicating with the humans, when he staggered out into the coarse and up toward the hall...groaning out, Mercy Peace(51), results with him being nearly killed with spears, arrows, and swords. Humanity, his closest peer, rejects Grendel and forces the beast to digest the rest of his life in isolation. But unlike in romanticism, in which isolation is viewed positively, Grendels loneliness is sh have to be more of a curse than as a boon. Grendel despises his loneliness and it turns him into a spiteful creature whose goal is to extirpate Hrothgar. This dedication, fed by a hatred to his loneliness, result s in Grendels transition into an anti-hero. instead than living peacefully in nature, Grendel chooses to be consumed by the romantic nous that society, specifically Hrothgars society, is evil, corruptive, and destructive. For Grendel, he comes to the self-realization that he is, Grendel, Ruiner of mead halls, Wrecker of Kings(80), and it his occupation and fate to kill and eat Hrothgars citizens.Isolation is not the only perspective of a romantic hero. Individualism and a persons ability to choose their own actions also play an important part. In Gardners novel, Grendel acts on his own inclination and does not follow the advice that others give him.
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